Discuss how the dispute over slavery during the presidency of Lincoln altered the nation’s concept of democracy.

Discuss how the dispute over slavery during the presidency of Lincoln altered the nation’s concept of democracy. Examine Lincoln’s reasoning for passing the Emancipation Proclamation and the Thirteenth Amendment into law and how such decisions were perceived by both northern and southerners during the war. Must use McPherson why men fought in the civil war

Do you agree with U.S. Air Force General Curtis LeMay’s statement that had the U.S. lost the war against Japan, the American aircrews would have been treated as war criminals for their conduct of bombing Japanese cities, to include Hiroshima and Nagasaki?Discuss

Write a 250-word short essay on your opinion of this particular critique of the U.S. bombing of Japan in the Second World War. Your paper should discuss the following: Do you agree with U.S. Air Force General Curtis LeMay’s statement that had the U.S. lost the war against Japan, the American aircrews would have been […]

Are there any situations in which it might be a good idea to include additional or different terms in the “acceptance” without making the acceptance expressly conditional on assent to the additional or different terms?Discuss

In complete sentences respond to the following prompts: Summarize the facts of the case; Identify the parties and explain each party’s position; Outline the case’s procedural history including any appeals; What is the legal issue in question in this case? How did the court rule on the legal issue of this case? What facts did […]

How did that particular person, movement, event, idea, etc. “set the stage” for our own time period? How did it/they lay the foundation for our own time?

Description Many people think that studying history before the 20th century doesn’t really make sense because the 18th and 19th centuries were so long ago that we can’t really apply that history to the modern day. But of course, as history students yourselves, you know that’s not true. Think of an event, a movement, a […]